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- From: dave@ratmandu.esd.sgi.com (dave "who can do? ratmandu!" ratcliffe)
- Subject: The BEIR V Report in "Deadly Deceit, Low-Level Rad/High-Level Coverup"
- Message-ID: <1992Dec28.140639.17475@odin.corp.sgi.com>
- Summary: 1990 BEIR Report substanstiates findings of "Deadly Deceit"'s authors
- Keywords: Biological Effects of Ionizing Radiation
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- Date: Mon, 28 Dec 1992 14:06:39 GMT
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-
-
- the following review of the National Academy of Science's Committee on the
- Biological Effects of Ionizing Radiation, BEIR V report, issued in 1990,
- inside of the Appendixes of "Deadly Deceit," indicates there may actually be
- some movement inside the BEIR Committees towards an acknowledgement of the
- true costs of almost fifty years of the continued development of nuclear
- technology. first some excerpts, then an observation about the possible
- changing point-of-view being presented by the committees that publish the
- BEIR reports:
-
-
- . . . The report . . . pinpoint[s] what we believe is the basic
- problem: "the discrepancies between estimates based on high-dose studies
- and observations made in some low-dose studies could . . . arise from
- problems of extrapolation."[218] These extrapolations may have led to
- underestimates at low doses, because they assumed the dose-response
- curve was linear or quadratic, rather than supralinear (which rises
- rapidly at low doses and levels off at high doses). . . . As a result
- of risk estimates based on mistaken extrapolations, government standards
- for environmental releases of radioactivity from nuclear facilities may
- be 100 to 1000 times too high, especially for infants. . . .
- These findings, based on the follow-up of some 16 million women over
- as long a period as 36 years, support the conclusion of Dr. Stewart and
- her colleagues that natural and man-made background radiation may
- account for the majority of childhood cancers and leukemias in our
- society today. A total background dose (including cosmic rays and
- internal sources within the body) of only 150 millirads before birth
- appears to double the risk of a child dying of cancer or leukemia
- before age 15. This represents an increased risk of 0.6 percent per
- millirad, which is many thousands times greater than the 0.8 percent
- increased risk per 10,000 millirads derived by BEIR V for adults based
- on exposure to high-energy gamma rays at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.[227] . . .
- According to BEIR V, a comprehensive survey of cancer incidence and
- mortality near nuclear installations in England--carried out by the
- United Kingdom Office of Population Censuses and Surveys--found
- "significant overall excesses of cancer mortality due to lymphoid,
- leukemia and brain cancer in children and due to liver cancer, lung
- cancer, Hodgkin's disease, all lymphomas, unspecified brain and central
- nervous system tumors, and all malignancies in adults."[233] It is
- interesting to note that the study found cancer rates did not diminish
- consistently with distance from the plants. This finding could be
- explained by our hypothesis that contaminated milk and food produced in
- rural areas near nuclear plants is frequently transported to the large
- urban centers, so that there often is not a simple correlation with
- proximity. Furthermore, a logarithmic type of dose-response, which is
- quite flat above the smallest doses, would tend to mask any dependence
- upon distance. . . .
- Thus, the BEIR V report's many citations of rising rates of mental
- retardation, leukemia, and mortality associated with nuclear plants and
- bomb-test fallout further support our hypothesis that the risks from
- small doses of environmental radiation have been severely
- underestimated by government agencies. We suggest in Chapter Six that
- this tendency may even have led to outright falsification of data.
-
-
-
- it is interesting to note in Dr. Rosalie Bertell's critique of ICRP structure
- and membership included in this series, her assessment of the BEIR Committees:
-
- The BEIR Committees are heavily staffed with personnel from
- U.S. Government nuclear research laboratories such as Oak
- Ridge and Brookhaven, and with researchers from the atomic
- bomb research centers at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. There is
- a greater breadth of expertise on the BEIR Committees than
- on ICRP and much more internal dissent. However, the
- Committee assumes an adversarial rather than scientific
- role. For example, BEIR III includes critiques of
- scientists who have challenged its risk factors without
- providing for a response by these scientists to their
- critique.
-
- The atomic bomb research has dominated the BEIR reports,
- and the health effects of exposure to ionizing radiation
- are seen as a national security subject in the U.S., both
- because they describe the effects of atomic bombs and
- because they affect the public's willingness to produce,
- test, store and accept the waste from the military program.
-
- . . . Until publicly forced to do so, these agencies have
- taken little or no responsibility for the human
- consequences and suffering caused by these misguided human
- experiments. These human experiments were carried out at
- or through the Oak Ridge Associated Universities, the
- Argonne National Nuclear Laboratory together with the
- University of Chicago, the Washington and Oregon State
- Prisons, Columbia University and the Montefiore Hospital in
- New York, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and
- Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. In addition to
- this, there were area experiments with radioactive iodine
- deliberately released to the environment from the U.S.
- Hanford Reservation and the U.S. National Reactor Testing
- Station at Idaho Falls. Some of the radiation related
- findings are still classified as secret in the U.S.
-
- Dr. Bertell notes that while "There is a greater breadth of expertise on the
- BEIR Committee than on ICRP and much more internal dissent," nevertheless,
- "Until publicly forced to do so, these agencies have taken little or no
- responsibility for the human consequences and suffering caused by these
- misguided human experiments." If BEIR V is any indication, it is possible
- the factual evidence is becoming so preponderant concerning the true costs
- and health effects of low-level ionizing radiation, that even such an
- organization of official repute as the National Academy of Science's Committee
- on the Biological Effects of Ionizing Radiation may be showing signs of
- cracking under the weight of it's almost fifty-year-old participation in
- suppressing research and information indicating that nuclear technology is
- causing irreparable damage to the life-support system--the air, the water, the
- food, the land--and at the same time, damaging the gene pool or the children.
- In other words, producing succeeding generations of human beings--as well as
- ALL life on Mother Earth--physically less able to cope and at the same time
- giving them more to cope with in an increasingly toxic environment. This is
- a death process, for which, in the *long-term*, we are killing ourselves as a
- species.
-
-
-
- the following is taken from the Appendix of the revised and updated softcover
- 1991 edition of "Deadly Deceit, Low-Level Radiation, High-Level Coverup" by
- Dr. Jay Gould and Benjamin A. Goldman with Kate Millpointer, published by
- Four Walls Eight Windows, New York, and reprinted here with the permission of
- Dr. Gould.
- ___________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- The BEIR V Report
-
-
- Just before this book went to print, the National Academy of Science's
- Committee on the Biological Effects of Ionizing Radiation (BEIR)
- released a new report that bears directly on our principal
- findings.[215] The Committee's extensive review of the latest
- scientific literature, known as the "BEIR V" report, concludes that
- cancer and leukemia risks for the survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
- have been underestimated by factors of three to four, due to faulty
- dose estimates and insufficient follow-up study of the survivors.
- Moreover, BEIR V found that risks from diagnostic X-rays may have been
- underestimated by an additional factor of two, because they were based
- on extrapolations of exposures to short bursts of high-energy gamma
- rays from bomb explosions, which were found to be less effective
- biologically than X-rays.[216]
- The BEIR V report cites numerous studies showing increases in
- leukemia and cancer rates from very low doses of fallout from weapons
- testing and nuclear plant accidents. As with diagnostic X-rays, these
- increases were far above those expected from the studies of bomb
- survivors, further supporting the principal findings of our book. The
- report suggests that, "although such studies do not provide sufficient
- statistical precision to contribute to the risk estimation procedure
- per se, {they do raise legitimate questions about the validity of the
- currently accepted estimates} [emphasis added]."[217]
- The report goes on to pinpoint what we believe is the basic problem:
- "the discrepancies between estimates based on high-dose studies and
- observations made in some low-dose studies could . . . arise from
- problems of extrapolation."[218] These extrapolations may have led to
- underestimates at low doses, because they assumed the dose-response
- curve was linear or quadratic, rather than supralinear (which rises
- rapidly at low doses and levels off at high doses).
- A supralinear dose-response curve is suggested by the so-called
- "Petkau effect" (discussed in our methodological appendix), which
- involves tumor promotion from free radicals created by repeated
- exposures at low dose-rates. Indeed, the BEIR V report explicitly
- refers to the tumor-promoting effect of free radicals observed in
- laboratory studies of cells, and illustrates how such promoting agents
- can dramatically change the shape of the dose-response curves so as to
- increase the effect of carcinogens at the lowest doses.[219] As a
- result of risk estimates based on mistaken extrapolations, government
- standards for environmental releases of radioactivity from nuclear
- facilities may be 100 to 1000 times too high, especially for infants.
- The BEIR V findings of greatest concern for the long run may be the
- effects of low radiation doses on the physical and mental development
- of the newborn. Detailed studies of infants who were {in utero} at the
- time of the bomb detonations in Hiroshima and Nagasaki found a much
- greater risk of severe mental retardation than previously
- believed.[220] Moreover, the new studies found that intelligence test
- scores and school performance of children exposed {in utero} were also
- significantly affected in relation to the degree of exposure.[221] New
- studies of children whose heads and necks were irradiated for
- therapeutic purposes in their early childhood also found behavioral
- impairment as well as poorer school performance. For example, a study
- by an Israeli group found irradiated children scored poorly on
- aptitude, intelligence, and psychological tests, often dropped out of
- school or entered mental hospitals for neuro-psychiatric diseases, and
- had higher rates of mental retardation.[222]
- These results, combined with the new findings of errors in
- dosimetry, the differences in types of radiation and exposure, and the
- erroneous assumptions about the shape of the dose-response curve,
- independently support the correlations of fallout levels with SAT
- scores in the U.S., which, along with their grave implications for
- attendant social problems, are discussed in Chapter Eleven. The new
- evidence led to the following recommendation in the BEIR V report:
-
- {The dose-dependent increase in the frequency of mental
- retardation in prenatally irradiated A-bomb survivors implies the
- possibility of higher risks to the embryo from low-level
- radiation than have been suspected heretofore. It is important
- that appropriate epidemiological and experimental research be
- conducted to advance our understanding of these effects and their
- dose-effect relationship.[223]}
-
- As well as the need for more research, these findings indicate the need
- to take immediate steps to reduce considerably the permissible levels
- of radioactive isotopes in our milk and diet.
- The Delaney Clause of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act prohibits any
- addition to food of substances known to be carcinogenic in man or
- animal.[224] Yet new studies reviewed in the BEIR V report indicate
- that radioactive isotopes added to milk and other food by bomb-test
- fallout are associated with significant increases in leukemia rates in
- the U.S. BEIR V describes the findings as follows:
-
- {Leukemia death rates (for all ages and all cell-types) peaked in
- the decade 1960-1969 and were consistently highest in states with
- high strontium-90 levels in the diet, milk, and bones (based on
- surveys by the Public Health Services from 1957 to 1970) and
- lowest in states with low strontium-90 levels.[225]}
-
- These effects were observed despite the fact that dose rates were well
- below allowable limits: the estimated total dose over many years of
- weapons testing was only 400 millirads, compared with a legally
- permitted maximum individual dose of 500 millirads per year.
- The BEIR V report also cites a new large-scale British study by Dr.
- Alice Stewart and her associates demonstrating that extremely small
- radiation doses in the environment are capable of affecting the future
- health of individuals exposed as fetuses.[226] Dr. Stewart had
- established with earlier research that childhood cancers and leukemias
- were associated with exposures to diagnostic X-rays during pregnancy.
- In the latest study, her group discovered a direct correlation of
- childhood cancers and leukemias with background levels of gamma
- radiation from natural and man-made sources in England, Wales and
- Scotland. The cumulative outdoor doses due to this source during fetal
- life varied between only ten and 40 millirads, with an average of 22
- millirads. After correcting for a series of socioeconomic, medical and
- demographic factors, the researchers found that the effect on fetuses
- of radioactivity on the ground was more than three times greater than
- that of diagnostic X-rays.
- These findings, based on the follow-up of some 16 million women over
- as long a period as 36 years, support the conclusion of Dr. Stewart and
- her colleagues that natural and man-made background radiation may
- account for the majority of childhood cancers and leukemias in our
- society today. A total background dose (including cosmic rays and
- internal sources within the body) of only 150 millirads before birth
- appears to double the risk of a child dying of cancer or leukemia
- before age 15. This represents an increased risk of 0.6 percent per
- millirad, which is many thousands times greater than the 0.8 percent
- increased risk per 10,000 millirads derived by BEIR V for adults based
- on exposure to high-energy gamma rays at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.[227]
- Dr. Stewart's findings would strongly indicate that the standards
- set for exposure of adults to low-level radiation may be thousands of
- times too high for the developing fetus. Her work is based on the
- Oxford Survey of Childhood Cancers which covers 22,351 cases, a far
- larger universe than that of the Hiroshima-Nagasaki survivors.
- Moreover, it uses far superior dosimetry: National Radiological
- Protection Board measurements of background gamma radiation levels
- produced by radioactivity on the ground for every ten-kilometer square
- area in England, Wales and Scotland. It is unfortunate that BEIR V did
- not quantify this enormous difference between the sensitivity of the
- developing fetus to low-level radiation and that of the adult.
- Numerous other studies, many from England, have examined the effects
- of low-level man-made environmental radiation on children.[225] One
- study examined excess leukemia rates among children near the Windscale
- (Sellafield) nuclear reactors and reprocessing plant on the Irish Sea,
- near the Scottish border.[229] Another examined children under five
- years old living within ten kilometers of one or more British nuclear
- plants, and another looked at childhood leukemia cases around four
- nuclear facilities in western Scotland.[230] Using an automated
- technique for locating unusual clusters of cancers, one study
- identified Seascale, which is near Sellafield, as an area in the
- Northern and Northwestern regions of England with unusually high
- mortality from acute lymphoblastic leukemia in children.[231]
- The BEIR V report cites many other recent epidemiological studies
- that also support our findings of much greater-than-expected effects
- from environmental radiation on adults as well as infants and children.
- It cites studies of rises in cancer and leukemia among the residents
- downwind from the Nevada Test Site, studies of participants in American
- and British nuclear weapons tests, where again leukemia deaths were
- found to have occurred at rates significantly above those normally
- expected, despite the very small external gamma radiation doses.[232]
- According to BEIR V, a comprehensive survey of cancer incidence and
- mortality near nuclear installations in England--carried out by the
- United Kingdom Office of Population Censuses and Surveys--found
- "significant overall excesses of cancer mortality due to lymphoid,
- leukemia and brain cancer in children and due to liver cancer, lung
- cancer, Hodgkin's disease, all lymphomas, unspecified brain and central
- nervous system tumors, and all malignancies in adults."[233] It is
- interesting to note that the study found cancer rates did not diminish
- consistently with distance from the plants. This finding could be
- explained by our hypothesis that contaminated milk and food produced in
- rural areas near nuclear plants is frequently transported to the large
- urban centers, so that there often is not a simple correlation with
- proximity. Furthermore, a logarithmic type of dose-response, which is
- quite flat above the smallest doses, would tend to mask any dependence
- upon distance.
- The BEIR V report also cites a study of excess leukemia and other
- cancers of the blood-forming system in five towns near the Pilgrim
- nuclear reactor in Massachusetts.[234] This reactor had a series of
- large releases, culminating in 1982 to 1983, due to a faulty
- radioactive waste treatment system. Although these were among the
- worst releases in the history of U.S. commercial nuclear power, their
- seriousness was kept secret at the time. Sharp rises in Massachusetts'
- monthly infant mortality rates during the summer of 1982 led to our
- discovery of large spurious "negative" readings of radioactivity in New
- England's milk (described in Chapter Six and illustrated in Figure 6-7).
- Thus, the BEIR V report's many citations of rising rates of mental
- retardation, leukemia, and mortality associated with nuclear plants and
- bomb-test fallout further support our hypothesis that the risks from
- small doses of environmental radiation have been severely
- underestimated by government agencies. We suggest in Chapter Six that
- this tendency may even have led to outright falsification of data.
-
-
-
- [215] Committee on the Biological Effects of Ionizing Radiation, {Health
- Effects of Exposure to Low Levels of Ionizing Radiation: BEIR V,}
- Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 1990.
-
- [216] {Ibid.,} p. 218.
-
- [217] {Ibid.,} p. 47.
-
- [218] {Ibid.}
-
- [219] {Ibid.,} p. 139 and Figures 3-4 and 3-5 on p. 146. Supporting
- references include: E. S. Copeland, editor, A National Institutes
- of Health Workshop Report, "Free radicals in promotion--a chemical
- pathology study section workshop," {Cancer Research,} Vol. 43,
- 1983, pp. 5631-5637; S. M. Fisher and L. M. Adams, "Suppression
- of tumor-promoter induced chemiluminescence in mouse epidermal
- cells by several inhibitors of arachinoic acid metabolism,"
- {Cancer Research,} Vol. 45, 1985, pp. 3130-3136; B. 0. Goldstein,
- G. Witz, M. Amoruso, D. S. Stone, and W. Troll, "Morphonuclear
- leukocyte superoxide anion radical (02) production by tumor
- promoters," {Cancer Letters,} Vol. 11, 1981, pp. 257-262; D. R.
- Jaffe, J. F. Williamson, G. T. Bowden, "Ionizing radiation
- enhances malignant progression of mouse skin tumors,"
- {Carcinogenesis,} Vol. 8,1987, pp. 1753-1755; J. B. Little and
- J. R. Williams, "Effects of ionizing radiation on mammalian
- cells," in S. R. Geiger, H. L. Falk, S. D. Murphy, and P. H. K.
- Lee, editors, {Handbook of Physiology,} Bethesda, MD: American
- Physiological Society, 1977, pp. 127-155; J. H. Marx, "Do tumor
- promoters affect DNA after all?" {Science,} Vol. 219, 1983,
- pp. 158-159; and J. E. Trosko, L. P. Yotti, S. T. Warren,
- G. Tsushimoto, and C. C. Chang, "Inhibition of cell-cell
- communication by tumor promoters," {Carcinogenesis,} Vol. 7,
- 1982, pp. 565-585.
-
- [220] BEIR V, pp. 355-362. Supporting references include: W. J. Blot
- and R. W. Miller, "Mental retardation following in utero exposure
- to the atomic bombs of Hiroshima and Nagasaki," {Radiology,} Vol.
- 106, 1973, pp. 617-619, W. J. Blot, "Review of thirty years study
- of Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bomb survivors," II Biological
- effect. C. Growth and development following prenatal and children
- exposure to atomic radiation, {Journal of Radiation Research,}
- Vol. 16 (Suppl.), 1975, pp. 82-88, International Commission on
- Radiological Protection, {Developmental Effects of Irradiation on
- the Brain of the Embryo and Fetus: ICRP Publication 49,} Oxford:
- Pergamon, 1986, R. W. Miller and J. H. Mulvihill, "Small head size
- after atomic irradiation," {Teratology,} Vol. 14, 1976, pp. 335-
- 338, M. Otaki and W. J. Schull, "In utero exposure to A-bomb
- radiation and mental retardation. A reassessment," {RERF
- Technical Report No. 1-83,} 1983, W. J. Schull and M. Otake,
- "Effects on intelligence of prenatal exposure to ionizing
- radiation," {RERF Technical Report 7-86,} 1986, United Nations
- Scientific Committee on the Effects of Ionizing Radiation
- (UNSCEAR), {Genetic and Somatic Effects of Ionizing Radiation:
- Report E. 86. IX. 9,} New York, NY: United Nations, 1986, and
- J. W. Wood, K. G. Johnson, Y. Omori, S. Kawamoto, and R. J. Keehn,
- "Mental retardation in children exposed in utero, Hiroshima and
- Nagasaki," {American Journal of Public Health,} Vol. 57, 1967,
- pp. 1381-1390.
-
- [221] See W. J. Schull, M. Otake and Y. Yoshimaru "Effect on
- intelligence test score of prenatal exposure to ionizing radiation
- in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, A comparison of the old and new
- dosimetry systems," {1988 Revised RERF Technical Report 3-88,} In
- preparation.
-
- [222] BEIR V, p. 362, reviewing: E. Ron, B. Modan, S. Flora,
- I. Harkedar, and R. Gureurt, "Mental function following scalp
- irradiation during childhood," {American Journal of Epidemiology,}
- Vol. 116, 1982, pp. 149-60.
-
- [223] BEIR V, p. 8.
-
- [224] See footnote 163.
-
- [225] BEIR V, p. 376, reviewing: V. E. Archer, "Association of nuclear
- fallout with leukemia in the United States," {Archive of
- Environmental Health, Vol. 42, 1987, pp. 263-271.
-
- [226] BEIR V, p. 387, reviewing: E. G. Knox, A. M. Stewart,
- E. A. Gilman, and G. W. Kneale, "Background radiation and
- childhood cancer," {Journal of Radiological Protection,} Vol 8,
- No. 1, 1988, pp. 9-18.
-
- [227] BEIR V, p. 6.
-
- [228] One from the U.S. is: J. K. Lyon, M. R. Klauber, J. W. Gardner,
- and K. S. Udall "Childhood leukemias associated with fallout from
- nuclear testing," {New England Journal of Medicine,} Vol. 300,
- 1979, pp. 397-402.
-
- [229] M. J. Gardner and P. D. Winter, "Mortality in Cumberland during
- 1959-78 with reference to cancer in young people around Windscale
- (letter)," {The Lancet,} Vol. i, 1984, pp. 216-217, and M. J.
- Gardner, A. J. Hall, S. Downes, and J. D. Terrell, "Follow up
- study of children born to mothers resident in Seascale, West
- Cumbria (birth cohort)," {British Medical Journal,} Vol. 295,
- 1987, pp. 822-827.
-
- [230] E. Roman, V. Beral, L. Carpenter, et al., "Childhood leukemia in
- the West Berkshire and Basingstoke and North Hampshire District
- Health Authorities in relation to nuclear establishments in the
- vicinity," {British Medical Journal,} Vol. 294, 1987, pp. 597-602,
- and D. J. Hole and C. R. Gillis, "Childhood leukemia in the west
- of Scotland," {The Lancet,} Vol. 2, 1986, pp. 525.
-
- [231] BEIR V, p. 379, reviewing: S. Openshaw, M. Charlton, A. W. Craft,
- and J. M. Birch, "Investigation of leukemia clusters by use of a
- geographical analysis machine," {The Lancet,} Vol. i, 1988,
- pp. 272-273.
-
- [232] J. L. Lyon, and K. L. Schuman, "Radioactive fallout and cancer
- (letter)," {Journal of the American Medical Association,} Vol.
- 252, No. 14, 1984, pp. 1845-1855, C. J. Johnson, "Cancer incidence
- in an area of radioactive fallout downwind from the Nevada test
- site," {Journal of the American Medical Association,} Vol. 251,
- 1984, pp. 230-236, G. G. Caldwell, D. Kelley, M. Zack, H. Falk,
- and C. W. Heath, "Leukemia among participants in military
- maneuvers at a nuclear bomb test: a preliminary report," {Journal
- of the American Medical Association,} Vol. 244, 1980, pp.
- 1575-1578, G. Caldwell, D. Kelley, C. W. Heath Jr., and M. Zack
- "Mortality and cancer frequency among military nuclear test
- (Smoky) participants, 1957 through 1979," {Journal of the American
- Medical Association,} Vol. 250, No. 5,1983, pp. 620-624,
- G. Caldwell, D. Kelley, C. W. Heath, Jr., and M. Zack,
- "Polcythemia vera among participants of a nuclear weapons test,"
- {Journal of the American Medical Association,} Vol. 252, 1984, pp.
- 662-664, and S. C. Darby, G. M. Kendall, T. P. Fell, et al., "A
- summary of mortality and incidence of cancer in men from the
- United Kingdom who participated in the United Kingdom's
- atmospheric nuclear weapon tests and experimental programs,"
- {British Medical Journal,} Vol. 296, 1988, pp.332-338.
-
- [233] BEIR V, p. 378, reviewing: D. Forman, P. Cook-Mozaffari,
- S. Darby, et al., "Cancer near nuclear installations," {Nature,}
- Vol. 329, 1987, pp. 499-505 and P. Cook-Mozaffari, F. L. Ashwood,
- T. Vincent, et al., "Cancer incidence and mortality in the
- vicinity of nuclear installations in England and Wales, 1950-
- 1980," Studies on Medical and Population Subjects, No. 51, London:
- Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1987. An earlier study had not
- found a clear pattern of cancer increases in individuals living
- near fourteen nuclear facilities and five non-nuclear plants in
- England and Wales. See J. A. Baron, "Cancer mortality in small
- areas around nuclear facilities in England and Wales," {British
- Journal of Cancer,} Vol. 50, 1984, pp. 815-829.
-
- [234] Richard W. Clapp, S. Cobb, C. K. Chan, and B. Walker, Jr.,
- "Leukemia near Massachusetts nuclear power plant," {The Lancet,}
- December 5, 1987, pp. 1324-1325.
-
-
-
- --
- The Hopi believe this is the Fourth World. There were seven worlds created
- at the beginning. The first three were each destroyed in turn because the
- humans inhabiting them had diverged too far from their original sacred path
- of connectedness with and respect for all life on Mother Earth. Their
- prophecies (see "Book of the Hopi" by Frank Waters) describe the possibility
- of such a destruction of the Fourth World (in the forms of uranium mining,
- the existence of powerlines, and the atomic bomb):
-
- If we dig precious things from the land, we will invite disaster.
-
- Near the Day of Purification, there will be cobwebs
- spun back and forth in the sky.
-
- A container of ashes might one day be thrown from the sky,
- which could burn the land and boil the oceans.
-
-
-
- KOYAANISQATSI
-
- ko.yaa.nis.qatsi (from the Hopi Language) n. 1. crazy life. 2. life
- in turmoil. 3. life out of balance. 4. life disintegrating.
- 5. a state of life that calls for another way of living.
-